Venezuela's President
Hugo Chavez has proclaimed victory over the participants of a 63-day
strike against the government which is being scaled back in the face of
weakening support.

Mr Chavez refuses to step down

Mr Chavez has repeatedly brushed aside calls for his resignation.
Opponents accuse the president of authoritarian rule and of ruining the
economy.

"Today is a victorious
day," Chavez said in his weekly broadcast on Sunday, following the
announcement by opposition leaders that they were allowing some
businesses to begin opening for restricted hours.

But the opposition stressed that its struggle against the president was simply "entering a new phase".

National petition

"We have beaten once and for all a
new destabilising attempt, a new malevolent and criminal attempt to sink Venezuela," Mr Chavez said.

But in a new offensive
against the president, hundreds of thousands of his critics signed a
petition on Sunday calling for early elections following the failure to
oust him through the national strike.

Under the country's
constitution, opposition leaders would be permitted to make the request
if they secured the signatures of 15% of Venezuela's registered voters
- approximately 1.8 million people.

It was not clear how many people had signed it so far.

Meanwhile, shops,
businesses, banks and schools are all resuming normal operations,
although the return to work will not include thousands of oil workers
who have decided to continue their strike until Mr Chavez calls
elections.

Oil prices

World crude oil prices
have spiralled to two-year highs since the strike began in the world's
fifth largest oil exporting country.

However Mr Chavez claimed
oil production was rising to about two-thirds of pre-strike levels, and
oil workers, though estimating output at lower than that, acknowledged
it was rising.

Explaining what had
brought about the change of tactics, Jesus Torrealba, executive
secretary of the opposition co-ordinating committee has said: "The
national strike has reached its objectives and the protest is entering
a new phase."

But experts say the strike had begun to falter as many companies, faced with bankruptcy, re-opened for business.

The strikes, which began
on 2 December, have forced Venezuelans to queue for cash, food and gas,
and sparked angry protests in which at least seven people have been
killed.